
Friday Fish-Fry
DAVE DRAVECKY's gallant pitching
effort for the Giants yesterday was money in the bank for Lifesavers, the foundation set
up to help Alex Vlahos, the seven-yr-old San Mateo boy who has leukemia. Before the game,
stockbroker Gary Shemano and his cohorts at Bear Stearns pledged $75 for each pitch thrown
by Dravecky, who was making his first big league appearance since his cancer operation.
The triumphant Dravecky's 92 pitches added up to$6,900 for young Alex.
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CLITERARY NOTE: Did he or didn't he? Did William
Randolph Hearst call Marion Davies' most personal part "Rosebud"? That's the
question that has been tearing up the usually staid columns of the N.Y. Review of Books.
Author Gore Vidal says he did, and that's why Hearst reacted with such rage at Orson
Welles' "Citizen Kane," which ends with the mystery-solving shot of young Kane's
boyhood sled, named "Rosebud." Others say that Vidal is full of it ... Then,
last Fri., Charles Schulz's "Peanuts" appeared with a single-panel drawing of
Sally exclaiming to her TV set, "You sure fooled me... I thought 'Rosebud' was his
skateboard." Was Schulz, who feigns the manner of an appleknocker, getting off a
sophisticated in-joke? Is Sally less innocent than she has been drawn and generally
quartered? Wyn Hurst was dying to know so I tracked down Sparky, that being Schulz's
nickname. "For heaven's sake," said he, "I never heard of Hearst saying
that. I draw a month ahead. Pure coincidence. I love 'Citizen Kane.' And Sally is still
innocent" ... But the sweet mystery of love remains.
* * *
PRESSING ON: Homicide
Lt. Gerald McCarthy after an officer shot and killed a man in the Hashbury: "The
behavior of the deceased was so bizarre that the officer seemed to have no alternative
except to shoot him." If bizarre behavior is to be the yardstick, San Francisco will
be a ghost town in a week, predicts Jerry Semas ... Maybe you've read that the proposed
new ballyard for the Giants will be called a park, not a stadium - wherefore Mervin Fahn
of Sacramento has the perfect name: The Wherewillwe Park ... Joanne Sandstrom's capsule
critique of the new Sam Donaldson-Diane Sawyer "Primetime" news show on ABC:
"Embarrassing. The only Sam and Diane we need on Thursday nights are Malone and
Chambers. Bring back Shelley Long!" (cheers)..............
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Prelude
to Caen's item |
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Gore Vidal writing in
the pages of the New York Review of Books, June 1, 1989
"...The Hearst newspapers declared
war on [Orson Welles] for his supposed travesty of Hearst's personal
life [in Citizen Kane]. On Kane's deathbed, he whispers the word
"Rosebud." This is thought to be the key, somehow, to his
life. In the film it turns out to be a boy's sled, which Mr. Stephen
Spielberg recently bought for $55,000. In actual life, Rosebud was what
Hearst called his friend Marion Davies's clitoris, the sort of item that
producer's of children's films tend not to collect...."
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Letter to Herb Caen
Sat. Aug 5.1989
Herb Caen
San Francisco Chronicle
5th & Mission
San Francisco, CA 94103
Dear Herb,
It was amusing enough to learn from
Gore Vidal in the June 1st issue of the New York Review of Books, that
"rosebud", far from being a sled, was William Randolph Hearst's pet name for his
friend Marion Davies's most private part. (Vidal thinks that Welles's joke accounts for
Hearst's furious reaction to Citizen Kane.) But I was happily stunned Friday
morning when I picked up the Chronicle to find the "Peanuts"' character Sally
exclaiming to her TV set, "You sure fooled me...l thought 'Rosebud' was his
skateboard." On your beat, citizen Caen! Does Charlie Schulz read the New York
Review of Books, or is Sally's innocence preserved?
Wyn Hurst
Menlo Park, California |
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